Pod Point partners with PSA Group for home EV charging Peugeot, Citroen, Vauxhall, and DS buyers will be offered Pod Point units Peugeot, Citroen, DS Automobiles, and Vauxhall have signed an EV charge point partnership deal with Pod Point, with the EV charging specialists set to be the exclusive supplier for all PSA Group brands in the UK. Three new pure-electric models are available to order now and due for delivery early next year, with the Peugeot e-208, Vauxhall Corsa-e, and DS 3 Crossback E-Tense all providing a range of more than 200 miles on a charge. Buyers of the 50 kWh models will be offered a charge point from Pod Point as part of the buying process, and the first 500 retail customers will get a free, fully-installed home charger. As well as the three EVs, the PSA Group brands are set offer the Peugeot e-2008 as another pure-electric model, plus PHEVs in the shape of the Peugeots 3008 Hybrid & Hybrid4, 508 Hybrid, and 508 SW Hybrid. DS Automobiles has the DS 7 Crossback E-Tense available, and Vauxhall will offer its Grandland X in Hybrid4 PHEV specification. Pod Point units bought through the PSA Group dealer network will come with an extended five year warranty, and Pod Point will also work with the group’s leasing arm – Free2Move Lease – as its preferred charging provider.
Origin: Pod Point partners with PSA Group for home EV charging
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Driving.ca takes home several AJAC journalism awards
Driving.ca writer Lorraine Sommerfeld, right, with Julie Lychak of Subaru Canada Driving.ca writers took home several trophies at the annual Automobile Journalists Association of Canada (AJAC) awards banquet this past week, presented by CarGurus.Jil McIntosh won the Environmental Journalism Award presented by Nissan Canada. She was last year’s Jaguar Land Rover Canada Journalist of the Year.Lorraine Sommerfeld won the inaugural KAL Tire Business Writing Journalism Award for her piece on escalating car loans. Journalist of the Year in 2014, she was this year’s runner-up in that category, and was also the runner-up in the Subaru Feature Writing division. Industry innovation awards went to Hyundai for its blind-spot-view monitor; Porsche for the 800-volt architecture underpinning the Taycan; and to FCA for its Ram blind-spot monitoring with trailer detection.Quebec journalist Marc Lachapelle won 2019’s Journalist of the Year, marking the fourth time he’s taken home that trophy.To celebrate the launch of the new Defender, Jaguar Land Rover also sponsored a new adventure writing award, won by Lesley Wimbush.The evening capped off a vastly overhauled AJAC “TestFest,” an event that see new vehicles from all segments being put through their paces at Canadian Tire Motorsports Park in Bowmanville, Ontario. Winners of that contest will be announced at the 2020 Canadian International Auto Show in
Origin: Driving.ca takes home several AJAC journalism awards
Sussex to Sant’Agata: taking the Lamborghini Huracan Performante home
We’ve all read about downforce, but photographer Max Edleston and I are now experiencing the phenomenon. It becomes noticeable at 180mph, when our Lamborghini’s gobsmacking Rosso Bia body begins to squeeze high-frequency suspension vibrations into submission, smoothing the flow. At 195mph, the force exerted on the front apron means effort is required to make tentative steering corrections. At 210mph, 10 screeching cylinders are all but drowned out by torrential oncoming air, which isn’t surprising because the Huracán Performante is now making almost eight times the downforce of a basic Huracán. Less than 1400kg of aluminium, plastic, ‘forged’ carbon-composite, Alcantara and ego has bolted itself to the road with a resolve that messes with your head. Only a moment ago, this thing seemed one of the most agile, flickable supercars out there. Now it’s an anvil on wheels. Far from feeling loose or frightening, by the time we nudge the wall (not for want of power but of a taller seventh gear), our Performante is travelling with trance-like calm amid a maelstrom of physics. According to the dials, the wall sits at a faintly absurd and totally exhilarating 216mph. Lift off, coast for a moment, tickle the other pedal… and breathe. Much as the sustained discharge of 631bhp leaves you speechless, it’s not the only reason we’re on an autobahn. Lamborghini needed this car chaperoned back home to Sant’Agata Bolognese from the Goodwood Festival of Speed and, when asked to go long and hard in arguably the greatest driver’s Lambo to date, the only answer is ‘sì’. On arrival, we’ll visit the factory to assess how much of an upheaval the company’s entry into the world of SUVs has created, but for now it’s all about having one last blast with what, in the future, we’ll undoubtedly refer to as a proper Lamborghini. It’s an enviable trip, but also one that raises some interesting questions. For one, how polished is too polished? Modern engineering means even trackday specials like the £215,000 Performante could, by the coating of their titanium con-rods, now have the breadth for grand touring. The ridiculous (deliberate?) absence of a solitary cupholder, doorbin or even a glovebox suggests otherwise, but so far the car’s ride quality has been exemplary given its role as a Nürburgring blade. To our surprise, the leather buckets – stitched with proud, vivid tricolore stripes to match the ones exploding along the outer sills – are also decently comfy. Close the exhaust valves that transformed our Eurotunnel carriage into the longest, wildest didgeridoo in existence and the car has manners, too. The violence can be suppressed and then electronically drip-fed in via three driving modes – Strada, Sport and histrionic Corsa – along with your right ankle’s angle of attack, but you do have a choice. Question is, should there ever be a choice with cars as beautifully unhinged as the Huracán Performante? Everywhere we go, the reaction to its sinful LED headlights, prehistoric silhouette and rear plumage is the same. People turn, their mouths fall open and the hand then points. In Italy, that’s your cue to pull both paddles, dropping the transmission in neutral, and depress the accelerator. The visible enjoyment of everyone else tells you two things. First, unlike aristocratic Ferrari and po-faced Porsche, the cars that mad Lamborghini builds are strangely classless, like Hawaiian shirts. They’re the good guys: everybody loves them. Second, supercars will always capture the imagination and reveal something about the person who sees one go by. Returning to the question, I think most people would rather cars like this left us tired and aching but wired and desperate for another hit, rather than frustrated by a perceived lack of grit. But if a sweet spot between does exist, our route to Italy gives ample opportunity to see whether the Performante nails it. There is the autobahn, which we pick up at Kradenbach in the Rhineland. It’s a theatre in which the Performante actually does pretty well, with its speed, soft mid-engined-style spring rates and reasonable 25mpg cruising economy; this from a 5.2-litre naturally aspirated V10 that will go down as one of the greatest-ever road-car engines. Later on we’ll reach Baden-Baden, from where the evocatively named Black Forest High Road flows southeast, wide and smooth over low, densely wooded mountains. Day two sees us over the much more technical Silvretta Pass in Austria before heading to Innsbruck, then down into the wealthy, industrialist plains of northern Italy and Lamborghini’s hometown. It’s about 1200 miles all-in, further than many owners will drive these cars annually. More fool them. Two-hundred miles evaporate and we reach the Black Forest at sunset, where the Performante performs its party piece, which is to rip into the road surface with Pirelli tyres that feel more like crampons and allow you to get the digital tacho whirring like a Catherine
Origin: Sussex to Sant’Agata: taking the Lamborghini Huracan Performante home
Home on the Range Anxiety
Vancouvers Regina Chan poses for a photo op at Drumheller, Alberta during the first day of the 2019 EcoRun.AJAC/John Walker CALGARYOn the face of it, AJAC choosing Alberta as the location for the 2019 EcoRun seemed a little like setting up a Beyond Meat concession at the Calgary Stampede.A hyper-miler challenge deep in the heart of oil country? Why, we might as well have just plastered We Love Justin bumper stickers on the 20 vehicles taking part in the 877-kilometre, two-day event and really stick it to our friendly host province. But when the dust had settled, and the green jersey awarded to the most miserly of the 19 automotive journalists taking part, it turned out that holding the 8th annual EcoRun in Wild Rose Country underscored both the advancements made and the challenges that remain in terms of electric vehicle adoption.Five of the 20 vehicles in the challenge were plug-in EVs, one was a hydrogen-powered EV, and three were plug-in hybrids. The remaining dozen were a mix of hybrid and gas-powered vehicles, including a diesel pickup truck. That latter group caused no issues for event organizers. It was the former one that provided, quite literally, some near-sleepless nights. Ambitious was a word that crossed my mind when I received the two-day drive itinerary ahead of the event, the first day a 485-km odyssey that began bright and early in Edmonton, with the first leg taking us south to Red Deer, the second heading east then south to Drumheller, and the final leg of the day southwest to Calgary. Likewise, day twos 392-km route was broken up into three legs, taking us on a path from Calgary to Longview, Longview to Canmore and Banff, then a blast east on the TransCanada Highway back to Cowtown.The average advertised full-charge range of the five all-electrics was 390-kilometresfrom a low of 377 (Jaguar I-Pace) to a high of 415 (Hyundai Kona EV)so it doesnt take a rocket scientist to figure out that each days drive would need to include an extended stop at charging stations. That wouldnt pose much of problem if the event was staged in and around Vancouver, Toronto or Montreal as those big urban centres have an established charging network. Turns out Alberta doesnt.Such is the lack of such infrastructure in the province that EcoRun organizers had to rent and truck in portable chargers to Drumheller and Banff to ensure the EVs could go the distance. And even then their best-laid plans went sideways, first when it was discovered that just a third of the nine charging stations at Edmontons Rogers Place secured for overnight charging actually worked, and then the next night when a thunderstorm caused a flicker of power outage that disabled the chargers powering up the I-Pace and Nissan Leaf Plus. Meaning each needed to be pulled from a scheduled leg from the next days drive to ensure they had enough battery power to make it back to Calgary. A more dire situation, though one that was known by EcoRun organizers from the start, was that the hydrogen-powered Hyundai Nexo wouldnt be available for the second days drive, to be replaced by a gas-powered Elantra. Turns out there are no public hydrogen stations in the province.The lesson? Without a robust, and reliable, charging network, EVs will never be more than daily urban transportation. Clearly Alberta isnt there yet, but the good news is that plans are underway to begin stringing together a charging network along the well-traveled east-west corridor of the province. By years end the Peaks to Prairies EV Network will see 20 public fast charging stations installed across southern Alberta. The stations will be owned and operated by ATCO, a Calgary-based electric utility company, and will run on the FLO network, Canadas largest EV charging network. Better still, 100 per cent of the electricity supplied to the stations will be from renewable energy sources. So, if the EcoRun was held in Alberta again this time next year, the charging logistics that challenged organizers would be minimized greatly.Despite those challenges, and the expected grumbling of some of the, lets just say less-EV-enthusiastic journalists (insert Drumheller dinosaur joke here), the 2019 EcoRun was a big success from the one true metric that matters: fuel economy.For the first time in the eight-year history of the event, the 5.0 L/100km overall average fuel consumption threshold was broken. The Natural Resources of Canada average for the 20 vehicles is 5.59, but the assembled drivers managed a thrifty 4.7, from a low of 1.8 equivalent for the Chevy Bolt to a high of 8.0 for the Ford Explorer Hybrid (for full results visit ajac.ca/ecorun).The highly coveted Green Jersey went Michel Crepault of Montreal, with myself and Torontos Jim Kenzie rounding out the podium. And one final note. As a first-time competitor I was struck by how different the drive portion of the EcoRun is to other drive events I take part in. Typically, fuelled as they are by equal parts ego and
Origin: Home on the Range Anxiety
County in California makes it almost illegal to repair your car at home
An example of a home garage.Stanley Munn Residents of Sacramento County may be in a bit of a bind the next time they elect to take on a car repair in their own garage. At issue are the countys zoning codes, some of which are worded with a vagueness that would make a politician proud.First expounded upon at the Grassroots Motorsports forum and brought into the mainstream consciousness by the gearheads at Jalopnik, the lawmakers have cleaved the activity of auto repair into two buckets: minor and major.Minor automotive repair is listed as including brake part replacement, minor tune-ups, change of oil and filter, repair of flat tires, lubrication and other similar operations.Major repairs are considered anything outside that scope, plus body or painting work of vehicles or vehicle parts. This is presumably meant to ward off neer-do-wells from setting up a chop shop or paint booth in their backyard.Heres the sticky part, though. The zoning law goes on to state it is unlawful to engage in even minor repair under the following circumstances:If using tools not normally found in a residence; When conducted on vehicles registered to persons not currently residing on the lot or parcel; Conducted outside a fully enclosed garage and resulting in any vehicle being inoperable for a period in excess of twenty-four hours. Number one on that list has a few people up in arms. What constitutes tools not normally found in a residence? Is it a welder? Air tools? Torque wrench? All of those reside in your authors suburban garage and see weekly use.The code goes on to say that The chemicals involved in major automobile repair can pollute our neighborhoods and endanger the health and wellbeing of our residents. Fair enough, as no one would want a person pouring motor oil or gallons of DuPont Hot Hues down the sewer drain.But its easy to see how haphazard enforcement of this code can get out of hand, especially when it goes on to say that this kind of activity increases vehicle traffic and the visual impact can negatively impact property values. Until the long arm of The Man comes knocking on my garage door, Ill continue giving my tools a
Origin: County in California makes it almost illegal to repair your car at home